166
166
Oct 27, 2010
10/10
by
KQED
tv
eye 166
favorite 0
quote 0
they, too, depend on us. and there's nothg the do with the treasuries they hd, with the security they hold. >> there's no doubt they have levege on us because of all the treasuryilling that they hold. they are ieffect our banke and it very hard to get into an argent and win that argumentith youranker. on the other hd, it'sind of mutua aured destruction siation because if they tryto dump their dollars, the value of the dollar that they hol wl simply go down. thin it's in both e american and chinese interest to reduce american indebtedness to china and that involves doing something about our budget defici which brings us back to entitlements. >> rose: is our subject here the inevitable decline ofamerica? i bievehe united states isoing toecline somewhat. bu i'm very careul s in "the grew gal superpower" we are not going to be great britain after world war ii. we're not going to fall that far. we're still going to have the most robustility in the world. the world will still depend on us. but we're going to do les
they, too, depend on us. and there's nothg the do with the treasuries they hd, with the security they hold. >> there's no doubt they have levege on us because of all the treasuryilling that they hold. they are ieffect our banke and it very hard to get into an argent and win that argumentith youranker. on the other hd, it'sind of mutua aured destruction siation because if they tryto dump their dollars, the value of the dollar that they hol wl simply go down. thin it's in both e american...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
56
56
Sep 23, 2010
09/10
by
WHUT
tv
eye 56
favorite 0
quote 0
us? >> well, a lot of business schools on how to make money. i want to tell people if you run business, you have to run the value first. to surf the others, help the others, that's the key. because i... one of the things we believe is if you think about making money and this is the u.s. dollar, talk about hong kong dollars, nobody wants to make friends with these people. thing about how can you help people and create value for the others and then you'll get the money. this is how we succeed in china. and this is why you call us believe that. people say jack, your company is crazy. how can you do that. this is the way we run the business. and i think this is the way the 21st century. the other thing is also focused on quality and people. >> rose: say that again? >> your own people. because i think china, the best resource is not... it's the human brain. 1.3 billion people. if we develop their brains, that's got a lot of innovation. that's the best resourcings we could ever have so many you
us? >> well, a lot of business schools on how to make money. i want to tell people if you run business, you have to run the value first. to surf the others, help the others, that's the key. because i... one of the things we believe is if you think about making money and this is the u.s. dollar, talk about hong kong dollars, nobody wants to make friends with these people. thing about how can you help people and create value for the others and then you'll get the money. this is how we...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
68
68
Jun 22, 2010
06/10
by
WHUT
tv
eye 68
favorite 0
quote 0
thank you for joining us. see you next time. captioning sponsored by rose communications captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org
thank you for joining us. see you next time. captioning sponsored by rose communications captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org
WHUT (Howard University Television)
60
60
Aug 10, 2010
08/10
by
WHUT
tv
eye 60
favorite 0
quote 0
it eliminates us from markets, it makes it harder for us to penetrate markets. so i think the chinese have very mercantilist in their approach. and they buy their way in. i tell you they've been quite effective. >> rose: back to turkey for a second. you don't worry about the future of secularism in turkey? >> there seems almost to be two turkeys, there's istanbul, very western, very modern, and then the countryside where things are much more conservative, as i indicated. i don't think we're going to see our backs turned on ataturk's vision of secularism. >> rose: and erdogan is committed to that idea? >> as far as i know he's committed. i think he's much more traditional muslim as opposed to smoking, alcohol, things of that nature. has some questions about the equality of women in society. however he's put in some amazing reforms pro-women. it's a mixed picture but i've got faith in prime minister erdogan. >> we ought to be enhancing that relationship because the role it can play with syria and snern. >> well... >> rose: and israel. >> indeed. indeed. we take no
it eliminates us from markets, it makes it harder for us to penetrate markets. so i think the chinese have very mercantilist in their approach. and they buy their way in. i tell you they've been quite effective. >> rose: back to turkey for a second. you don't worry about the future of secularism in turkey? >> there seems almost to be two turkeys, there's istanbul, very western, very modern, and then the countryside where things are much more conservative, as i indicated. i don't...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
151
151
Apr 9, 2010
04/10
by
WHUT
tv
eye 151
favorite 0
quote 0
stay with us. president obama's secured his first legislative accomplishment with the recent passage of the health-care bill it also earned him a place in history. the overhaul is the most sweeping domestic policy legislation in decades. and it is the culmination of efforts by generations of democratic leaders. at this historic moment we tack a look back at presidents past and a look ahead at president obama's place and challenge. joining me now are three presidential historians, doris kearns goodwin who has written about abraham lincoln, lyndon johnson and now theodore roosevelt. she is now work on a biography of teddy roosevelt. jon meacham wrote a biography of andrew jackson and now on president george bush 41. douglas brinkley who has written by roosevelt, reagan and carter. mi pleased to have all of these eminent writers on this television program. so i begin with doris kearns goodwin and having her assess where this president is at this time and what comparison can we make with other presiden
stay with us. president obama's secured his first legislative accomplishment with the recent passage of the health-care bill it also earned him a place in history. the overhaul is the most sweeping domestic policy legislation in decades. and it is the culmination of efforts by generations of democratic leaders. at this historic moment we tack a look back at presidents past and a look ahead at president obama's place and challenge. joining me now are three presidential historians, doris kearns...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
244
244
Oct 14, 2010
10/10
by
WHUT
tv
eye 244
favorite 0
quote 0
the jews used knob the diaspora when they were weak and dependent on others and to use his it withs in a very shrewd way against all the centers of powers of the israeli society and he and ora, they are friends they are good friends. and they drove together for hours and they like each other and she's very sensitive and attentive to his complexity and to his unbearable situation. and yet suddenly when there is tension between them in the car when she without thinking asks him top drive her son ofer to the gathering point of the army from which he will be sent to the occupied territorys to fight the brothers of sami, suddenly tension grow there is and in a minute they become representatives of their hostile peoples and when we are representatives we tend to overadvocate and to say things we don't really believe in. things that even humiliate us as human beings. but you could... you can see how in this little bubble of? the taxi all the israeli/arab conflicts suddenly comes to life. >> rose: the dedication of this book, 1985 to 2006. there it is, the death of your son. >> it's very hard
the jews used knob the diaspora when they were weak and dependent on others and to use his it withs in a very shrewd way against all the centers of powers of the israeli society and he and ora, they are friends they are good friends. and they drove together for hours and they like each other and she's very sensitive and attentive to his complexity and to his unbearable situation. and yet suddenly when there is tension between them in the car when she without thinking asks him top drive her son...
174
174
Aug 7, 2010
08/10
by
WETA
tv
eye 174
favorite 0
quote 0
they're exhibiting tool use skills. they're exhibiting abstraction skills, the ability to distinguish between same and different, to understand that there are-- there's information in my mind that isn't the same as information in your mind. that's a very high-order thing, that sort of segregation of the self and other. and animals that we that you felt as just a collection of very effectively expressed instincts are known to have these complex internal lives. >> rose: what does that say to us in terms of our relationship to them? >> it says a lot about us in terms of our relationship to animals and that's one of the points we try to make in the story. there are people who still maintain and through history have maintained that animals were simple automotad, that there wasn't even consciousness in them and you could frankly make a case for that for things like mull osks and cockroaches but most scientists now agree consciousness burns with almost equal brightness among chimps and humans and dolphins-- >> rose: the consci
they're exhibiting tool use skills. they're exhibiting abstraction skills, the ability to distinguish between same and different, to understand that there are-- there's information in my mind that isn't the same as information in your mind. that's a very high-order thing, that sort of segregation of the self and other. and animals that we that you felt as just a collection of very effectively expressed instincts are known to have these complex internal lives. >> rose: what does that say...
293
293
Jan 2, 2010
01/10
by
WETA
tv
eye 293
favorite 0
quote 0
she sa, "he put us f the trn because he di't regard us abeing good enough to sit where we were, since that was for white people," and she said, "but you mustn't cry aut that she sa, "if you have any ergy, i want youo use it provinto yourself, ando everyo else, that you are as go as any of those pple on that train rardless of their color." she said, "you dry those tes d i don't want y crying about that amore," and i have not ied about that anymore. >> i d't think being the party in pow necessarilyeans you're t party of govnment solutions toll the problems if you're in pow, and you use that pow and authority and responsility to empower localities andtates and people andamilies with owrship and entrepreneurship andpportunity and educational choice and more jobs, i ink people would see government as a eful tool to reaching that goal. i don't think the questi is government or nogovernmt. we're not zay faire 18-century capitalists -- wee not lessaiz ire 1h centycapitalists. i think that's t proper use of the government -- toreate a safety net under wch people are not allowe to fall but also
she sa, "he put us f the trn because he di't regard us abeing good enough to sit where we were, since that was for white people," and she said, "but you mustn't cry aut that she sa, "if you have any ergy, i want youo use it provinto yourself, ando everyo else, that you are as go as any of those pple on that train rardless of their color." she said, "you dry those tes d i don't want y crying about that amore," and i have not ied about that anymore. >> i...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
184
184
Jan 4, 2010
01/10
by
WHUT
tv
eye 184
favorite 0
quote 0
instead of permitting us to move to the so-called black coach, he put us off the train in the woods. >> charlie: unbelievable. >> and i did not know what was happening except i began to cry, because i was out there in the woods -- my mother was with me, and my sister, we had to trudge our way back -- we were still closer to renniesville than that kota, the town we were going, so we were trudging our way back to renniesville and i was crying and my mother said "what are you crying for?" i said "the man put us off the train." i was six years old. she said, "oh, that?" she said, "he put us off the train because he didn't regard us as being good enough sit where we were, since that was for white people," and she said, "but you mustn't cry about that. she said, "if you have any energy, i want you to use it proving to yourself, and to everyone else, that you are as good as any of those people on that train regardless of their color." she said, "you dry those tears and i don't want you crying about that anymore," and i have not cried about that anymore. >> i don't think being the party in p
instead of permitting us to move to the so-called black coach, he put us off the train in the woods. >> charlie: unbelievable. >> and i did not know what was happening except i began to cry, because i was out there in the woods -- my mother was with me, and my sister, we had to trudge our way back -- we were still closer to renniesville than that kota, the town we were going, so we were trudging our way back to renniesville and i was crying and my mother said "what are you...